Toying
with Her
Prescott Lane
Prescott Lane
Release Date: August
17th
Genre: Contemporary Romance
Genre: Contemporary Romance
It’s said you never forget your first.
She was my childhood best friend. We were inseparable. We kept each other's secrets and grew up knowing we would always be there for one another.
In the most devastating moment of our lives, we shared our grief--and found comfort in each other's arms. Somehow, the worst day became the best night.
And then she left.
I've never forgotten her. I've tried but couldn’t. My only consolation is the memory of one perfect night.
Now, ten years later she walks back into my life, a grown, gorgeous woman and I'm ready for a second chance.
The look in her eyes says I'm still what she wants, now I have to convince her to trust me with her heart. I’ll never allow anyone to toy with her again.
I know she still loves me, because true love never dies.
Hammering the nail with one
hard pound, I mutter, “Friends?”
That should be a cuss word,
especially coming out of her full, pink lips.
I toss the hammer aside, scanning the mostly-converted barn. Yep, I live in a barn. Well, not any barn. The barn where Sterling and I lost our
virginity. I know just the spot. It’s the spot where my bed is now.
I didn’t plan it that
way. In fact, I didn’t even really think
about it until she showed up in town the other day. I came home, walked in, and realized I’ve
designed this place around her. Crazy,
but true. That woman has burned herself
into the deepest parts of my soul.
Deeper than even I realized. She
was my first, a memory. I thought it was
over. I thought we’d only ever get that
one night. She had her life, and I had
mine. I didn’t see this coming.
This old barn sits on the
edge of my parents’ property. It sucks
to be almost thirty and still living on my parents’ land. Technically, I’m not living at home, but
sometimes it feels like it.
Unfortunately, buying my own house on my teaching salary isn’t in the
cards, so a few years ago, I started converting one of the old barns.
Every nail, every piece of
wood in here has been touched by me. And
it’s almost done. It’s wide open,
designed that way mostly because it’s less work than putting up a bunch of
walls. The only room with any privacy is
the bathroom. I left the distressed
rafters from the ceiling exposed and just refinished them. The original sliding barn doors have been
replaced with new ones. Almost one whole
wall houses my personal library. The
only thing left to finish is the kitchen.
The upper cabinets are in, but my only appliances are a refrigerator and
microwave. So any real meals I eat come
from the main house — my parents’ house.
My plan is to use part of my summer vacation to finish it up.
I look over at the bed. My subconscious must have taken over with
that decision. Sterling is etched into
the fiber of this place. Maybe that’s
the reason I haven’t ever brought a woman to see this place before? Who knows?
The subconscious is a tricky bitch.
But the memories of that day
and night are so vivid. It’s all
flooding back now that she’s back.
I remember a buddy of mine
had rushed me home my freshman year of college, making the two-and-a-half-hour
drive from New Orleans in just under two. But I was too late. I wasn’t here when Levi took his last
breath. Those few days are a blur. Everything is a blur until the moment I stood
up at his funeral to speak; her green eyes were the only thing I saw, her
whimpers the only ones I heard. I hadn’t
expected her to be there. I hadn’t
expected her to fly home from college to say goodbye to my brother, but she
had. And I didn’t expect her to find me
at my parents’ house after the funeral.
I swear, there were hundreds of people there, and it was the loneliest
day of my life. I had to get out of
there and started walking. I’m not sure
if it’s just me, but when I need to think, I tend to walk. That day, Sterling was by
my side.
We didn’t talk, roaming around the fields until we ended up at this
old barn. It was the place that Levi and
I escaped to. As little kids, we’d used
it as a fort, a clubhouse. Later, it
held our bikes and four wheelers.
I remember being embarrassed
bringing Sterling inside. It was old and
filled with our junk. The only place to
even sit was an old, beat up sofa. We
made good use of it, though.
I’ve never been as unprepared
for something as I was that day.
Unprepared to put my brother in the ground, unprepared to lose my
virginity, unprepared to let her walk away.
I chuckle remembering exactly
how unprepared I was when our naked bodies first touched. My brain thought “condom.” But I didn’t have one. My dick promised it’d pull out. But I had no idea the kind of willpower that
would take. I swear to God, I had every
intention of pulling out.
I thought for sure that she’d
kill me, and quickly launched into the lamest apology in the history of the
universe. Just thinking about it makes
me cringe. I was never so thankful for
anything in my whole life as when she kissed me to shut me up, whispering she
was on the pill.
Some might think it’s a dick
move to be banging a girl the day you bury your twin brother. But it wasn’t like that at all. It wasn’t cheap. I didn’t think of it as a one-night stand,
even though technically it was. It’s
impossible to explain. It was us
clinging onto life, onto each other.
Emily Brontë wrote, "Whatever
our souls are made of, his and mine are the same.” And after that night, our souls have been
forever linked.
Every single second of that
night is burned into my mind, my heart, my skin.
After that night, we stayed
in touch for a long time — email, phone calls.
But we were thousands of miles apart.
And our paths never crossed again.
If I was at home on break, she wasn’t.
It just seemed like it wasn’t meant to be. She is the one that got away. We never got our chance.
Now she’s back, and she
thinks we can be friends? I spent my
entire childhood and teenage years being “friends” with her.
She
wants to be friends? That’s fine. I’ll be her friend. But I’ll be damned if that’s all I am.
Prescott Lane is the Amazon best-selling author of Stripped Raw. She's
got seven other books under her belt including: First Position, Perfectly
Broken, Quiet Angel, Wrapped in Lace, Layers of Her, The Reason for Me, and The
Sex Bucket List. She is originally from
Little Rock, Arkansas, and holds a degree in sociology and a MSW from Tulane
University. She married her college sweetheart, and they currently live in New
Orleans with their two children and two crazy dogs. Prescott started writing at
the age of five, and sold her first story about a talking turtle to her father
for a quarter. She later turned to writing romance novels because there aren't
enough happily ever afters in real life.
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